Business
General Motors agrees to settle over South Africa apartheid claims
(Reuters) – U.S. car giant General Motors (GM) has agreed to pay a symbolic sum of up to US$1.5 million to victims of South Africa’s apartheid-era government, who are suing it and another four companies for helping prop up the white-minority state.
South Africa’s Khulumani Support Group lodged a U.S. class action lawsuit a decade ago against more than 20 firms it accused of aiding and abetting human rights violations, including torture and extrajudicial killings, under apartheid.
Only five companies, General Motors, which has since filed for bankruptcy, Ford, Daimler, German defence group Rheinmetall and computer giant IBM, still stand accused.
“GM want to carry on with their business in South Africa and want to settle their scores and maintain good relations with the country’s people,” said Khulumani member Shirley Gunn, who was detained and tortured under the white-minority rule that ended in 1994.
“But we are very grateful and can seriously start to redress the legacy of apartheid.”
General Motors said the settlement was agreed by a trust set up after the company declared bankruptcy in 2009, and as such would be a lot less than US$1.5 million.
The company also said the settlememt contained no admission of wrong-doing and stressed it had “adamantly opposed” apartheid.

